Malcolm Young awarded Ernst & Young Innovation Entrepreneur Of The Year 2010


Malcolm Young awarded Ernst & Young Innovation Entrepreneur Of The Year 2010


Source: Hexham Courant, UK - 18/01/2007 - View Source Article
A COMPANY founded by a scientist from East Woodburn has discovered three drugs that kill the hospital superbug MRSA.
e-Therapeutics, based in Newcastle, was founded by Professor Malcolm Young in 2003 and has since pioneered drug discovery using “systems biology.”
Source: Therapeutics Daily (press release) - 17/01/2007 - View Source Article
Scientists say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
New research firm e-Therapeutics claimed the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs.
MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year.
Source: The Scotsman - 17/01/07 - View Source Article
INCIDENTS of the deadly bug MSSA in Scotland are much higher than previously thought, figures revealed yesterday.
Cases of methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) - a relative of the MRSA superbug - increased to 377 from July to September last year.
This compared with 300 during the corresponding period in 2005 and 268 the previous quarter, according to Health Protection Scotland (HPS).
Source: Glasgow Evening Times - 16/01/07 - View Source Article
BRITISH scientists say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
New research firm e-Therapeutics claims the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs.
MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year. It is notoriously difficult to treat as it resists antibiotics.
Source: Edinburgh Evening News - 16/01/07 - View Source Article
SCIENTISTS say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
Newcastle-based research firm e-Therapeutics claims the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs. MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year. It has been notoriously difficult to treat as it resists antibiotics.
Source: The Scotsman - 16/01/07 - View Article Source
SCIENTISTS say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
Newcastle-based research firm e-Therapeutics claims the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs. MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year. It has been notoriously difficult to treat as it resists antibiotics.
Source: Metro - 16/01/07 - View Source Article
Scientists say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
New research firm e-Therapeutics claimed the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs.
MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year.
It has been notoriously difficult to treat as it resists antibiotics.
Source: Daily Mail - 16/01/07 - View Source Article
Scientists say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
New research firm e-Therapeutics claimed the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs.
MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year.
Source: Manchester Evening News - 16/ 1/2007 - View Source Article
SCIENTISTS say they have found three drugs which kill the MRSA superbug - after developing them on a computer.
New research firm e-Therapeutics claimed the treatment even works on strains of the bug which have defeated the best existing drugs.
MRSA has been blamed for thousands of deaths of hospital patients every year.
Source: Journal Live - 16/01/07 - View Source Article
Scientists in the North-East last night claimed to have found a cure for the deadly hospital superbug MRSA.
A new medical research firm in Newcastle said it had identified three drugs that kill the bug - which is blamed for thousands of hospital deaths every year.